Thrips as Crop Pests

Thrips as Crop Pests
Author: Trevor Lewis
Publisher: Cabi
Total Pages: 772
Release: 1997
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

A comprehensive treatise on thrips as crop pests set against a background covering basic biology, ecology, applied science and pest control.

Thrips Biology and Management

Thrips Biology and Management
Author: Bruce L. Parker
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 606
Release: 2013-11-11
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1489914099

Thrips (fhysanoptera) are very small insects, widespread throughout the world with a preponderance of tropical species, many temperate ones, and even a few living in arctic regions. Of the approximately 5,000 species so far identified, only a few hundred are crop pests, causing serious damage or transmitting diseases to growing crops and harvestable produce in most countries. Their fringed wings confer a natural ability to disperse widely, blown by the wind. Their minute size and cryptic behavior make them difficult to detect either in the field or in fresh vegetation transported during international trade of vegetables, fruit and ornamental flowers. Many species have now spread from their original natural habitats and hosts to favorable new environments where they often reproduce rapidly to develop intense damaging infestations that are costly to control. Over the past decade there have been several spectacular examples of this. The western flower thrips has expanded its range from the North American continent to Europe, Australia and South Africa. Thrips palmi has spread from its presumed origin, the island of Sumatra, to the coast of Florida, and threatens to extend its distribution throughout North and South America. Pear thrips, a known orchard pest of Europe and the western United States and Canada has recently become a major defoliator of hardwood trees in Vermont and the neighboring states. Local outbreaks of other species are also becoming problems in field and glasshouse crops as the effectiveness of insecticides against them decline.

Insect Reproduction

Insect Reproduction
Author: S. R. Leather
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 413
Release: 2018-01-18
Genre: Science
ISBN: 135109050X

This book consisting of ten review chapters contributed by leading workers in their respective fields, from around the world, covers the whole subject of insect reproduction.It begins with the basic physiological questions of insect reproduction, moves on to discuss the new advances seen in the fields of behavioural and ecological mechanisms, and culminates by examining the recent work on evolutionary biology and its application in the field. Each chapter, although including a brief review of the basic seminal work, focuses mainly on the advances made within the last ten years and highlights those areas in which the respective authors see the greatest scope for further important advances